The Morning Call (Sunday)

At World Series, kids can play too

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WASHINGTON — After Robinson Chirinos yanked a line drive off the foul pole in left field to give the Astros a 4-1 lead in Game 3 of the World Series against the Nationals, he huddled with his 12-year-old son, David, in the clubhouse.

“I came inside and he was waiting for me, like, ‘Give me a hug, nice job, good swing,’ ” Chirinos said. “Stuff like that, you can’t put into words. There’s some memories you’re going to remember forever. So I thank God and the Houston organizati­on to allow me to do that.”

All season, Major League Baseball has urged clubs and fans to “Let the Kids Play.” On Friday night, the Nationals and Astros didn’t need the encouragem­ent. There were enough youngsters with gloves during pregame warmups to fill out a Little League infield.

Owen Kendrick, the 10-year-old son of Nationals veteran Howie Kendrick, took grounders alongside the team at second base — one of his dad’s many positions. Owen and his 8-year-old brother Tyson also chased fly balls in the outfield.

“We do it all year,” Nationals pitching coach Paul Menhart said. But in the World Series?

“Why not? Why treat it any differentl­y?” Menhart said. “We’re a familyorie­nted team.”

During batting practice, Nationals second baseman Brian Dozier hit a high, routine fly ball to center field. Pitcher Joe Ross camped under it, barely needing to move a step. Meyer Cabrera, the 12-year-old son of infielder Asdrubal Cabrera, ran for the ball, stopped and watched Ross catch it. Meyer playfully tossed his glove and hit Ross in the leg, and they both laughed.

Cabrera said his son flew in from Florida earlier Friday to be with him for his first World Series home game.

“That means a lot for me. He’s always with me, all the time, in the regular season,” Cabrera said.

The Nats are the oldest team in the majors, which means plenty of kids are old enough and slick enough to handle sharp grounders or towering fly balls.

Reliever Sean Doolittle, who so far is only a dad to two dogs, said the team showed it has its priorities straight when it backed bullpen mate Daniel Hudson’s decision to leave during the NLCS to be with his wife, who gave birth to their third daughter.

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